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Post Adoption Issues and Concerns

Post Adoption Issues and Concerns. Victor Groza , Ph. D. Professor of Social Work Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences 11235 Bellflower Road Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio 44106 (216) 368‑6682 Presented to the Indian Council of Child Welfare New Delhi, October 2002.

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Post Adoption Issues and Concerns

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  1. Post Adoption Issues and Concerns Victor Groza , Ph. D. Professor of Social Work Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences11235 Bellflower RoadCase Western Reserve UniversityCleveland, Ohio 44106(216) 368‑6682 Presented to the Indian Council of Child Welfare New Delhi, October 2002

  2. Adoption is a process • Adoption is not a time-limited process, and adoption-related issues surface throughout the lives of the individuals involved in adoption—adoptees, adoptive parents and birth parents

  3. ISSUES IN FAMILY FORMATION • Adoptive family life is different than life as a biological family. • Different doesn’t mean deficit. • Families deal with differences in one of three ways: • families reject/deny the differences • families insist on differences • families acknowledge the difference • Consequences in ways families deal with differences • create a less open and less reality based environment • ascribe blame for difficulties to genetics or preadoptive history (i.e., "the bad seed" or “the damaged goods”) • openly, sharing concerns and feelings about their adoptive status

  4. Evidence Based Practice • views research & practice as part of the same problem-solving process • views research as a tool to be used by practice • makes maximum use of research findings • collects data systematically to monitor interventions and programs • demonstrates empirically whether or not interventions and programs are effective • specifies problems, interventions/activities & outcomes in terms that are concrete, observable & measurable

  5. Indian Families who Adopted: The Agency Context Program evaluation of the domestic adoption program of Bharatiya Samaj Seva Kendra in Pune, India, in collaboration with Holt International in Eugene, Oregon, USA

  6. INDIAN ADOPTIONS 1995-2000Source: CARA

  7. Agency Domestic Adoptions

  8. Indian Families who Adopted: Our Sample • The in-country breakdown used in this project was: • 374 families in Pune City • 672 families in other parts of India • 1046 Total in-country adoptions

  9. Pune Random sample of 187 from 374 families No address 49 (26%) Mailed survey to 138 94 responded (68%) Interview requested (138) 113 responded (82%) Outside Pune Random sample of 336 from 672 families No address 63 (19%) Mailed survey to 273 136 responded (50%) No interview requested Indian Families who Adopted: Our Method to Gather Information

  10. Overview of Children’s Characteristics • 53% female • Placement age=8 months • 40% placed under 1 and 93% placed under 2 years • Study age=7.3 years • In adoptive home=6.6 years • The majority of the children (95%) had been in an orphanage or institution before placement, for an average of 4.6 months. • About 16% of children had been in a foster family prior to adoption for an average of 3.5 months.

  11. Overall, these children do not have special physical or health needs. There were no reports of developmental delays at placement or at the time of the study. The majority of children had no sensory problems. For the few children entering the family with some sensorydifficulties, most of these children had improved at the time of the study with the exception of activity level being too high. While activity level too high was evident at placement for 8% of the children, the amount had almost doubled at the time of the study. Attachment relationships were very positive. The majority of children do not have behavior problems with the multiple measures used to assess behavior. However, in about 10% of the families, children had serious emotional and behavioral problems. All families easily identified strengths in their children. Overview of Child Functioning

  12. Adoptive Father 38.6 years old at adoption 46.7 at time of study 55% completed survey Adoptive Mother 35.5 years old at adoption 41.2 at time of study 33% completed survey Overview of the Adoptive Parents

  13. Overview of the Adoptive Families • 20% of families had other children in the home (15% adopted and 10% birth children) • Family income ranged from 9,550 rupees to 500,000 rupees per year; the salary of 500,000 rupees was very unusual with only one family reporting such income • Average income was 306, 665 rupees per year; median family income was 150,000 rupees per year • 60% of interviews were conducted at the residence of the family • the primary reason families adopted was infertility (81%) • Mother (43%) was infertile or could not conceive (19%) • Infertile father (15%) • Both (5%)

  14. Adoption Impact on Family

  15. Adoption Stability

  16. Birth Mother ages 13 to 35 at the time of the child’s birth; 20.9 years old on average About 25% of birth mothers were under the age of 17 and 50% were under the age of 20. About 20% of birth mothers were students, 37% were laborers, 20% were unemployed and 20% worked as domestics or were a housewife. Education ranged from illiterate to 15th grade; average grade was 7.6. Most birth mothers (63%) were single and about 18% were married. Birth Father 21 to 50 at the time of the child’s birth; 27.4 years old on average About 25% of birth fathers were under the age of 22 and 50% were under the age of 25. About 11% of birth fathers were students, 44% were laborers, 20% were professionals, 6% were unemployed and 6% were in the military. Education ranged from illiterate to 12th grade; average grade was 7.8. Most of the birth fathers were single (54%) and about 18% were married to some one else other than the birth mother. Birth Family Information

  17. How Child Became Available for Adoption • 60% of the children were available for adoption because the parents were unmarried and the child was born out of wedlock. • 25% were abandoned. • 7% of the children were placed for adoption due to poverty • 7% due to personal or social problems in the birth family • 1% due to incest or rape

  18. Adoption Issues in the Family • In many cases (38%), the child had not been told that they were adopted. • In 25% of the families, the parents initiated discussion with the child. • In about 20% of the families, the adoption was disclosed at the BSSK office or through BSSK. • In only 14% of the families did the child initiate discussion and in 5% a relative initiated the discussion. • While 38% of the families reported that the child felt comfortable discussing their adoption, only 10% of the children every initiated conversation about their adoption. • Almost half of the children do not know what birthmother means (47%). • The conversations about adoption was anxiety producing for many families and many of them discussed how they needed assistance in talking about adoption with their child. They also commented about needing help as the child gets older in dealing with adoption issues. They struggled with the nature of discussions when children were at various ages and wanted more preparation and assistance in dealing with adoption issues over time

  19. Services • Many families used the information they received from the agency about their child. • Contact with other adoptive families was a resource to families. • Families living outside Pune relied more on the agency and evaluated the parent support group experience more postive than families living in Pune. This may be, in part, to the fact that families living in a large metropolitan area such as Pune have access to a wider array of services and opportunities for support and assistance than do families who do not live in a metropolitan area. • A few families who adopted older children commented that the social worker providing post-placement services was supportive but too young and without sufficient professional experience to assist them when issue arose. • The one area of concern to many parents was the court system.

  20. Indian Children Adopted to the U. S.

  21. Country of Origin

  22. Indian Children in the U. S.

  23. FAMILY CARE Love/affection structure 1:1 attention/individual focus belonging to an extended system of relations stimulation through relationships INSTITUTIONAL CARE acceptance/tolerance distance routine 1:8-35 attention/group focus belong/identify to the group stimulation thru programs COMPARISON OF FAMILY FOSTER CARE TO INSTITUTIONAL CARE

  24. Risks to Children from Early Institutionalization • Health • Development • Attachment • Psychosocial (Emotional and Behavioral) Functioning

  25. Outcomes in International Adoption • Resilient Rascals • Wounded Wonders • Challenged Children

  26. Results from 3 Researchers

  27. Research on Indian Children Adopted by Americans • From the 1999 article, “The American Adoption of Indian Children from Mother Theresa’s Orphanages: The Parents,” by Joan Goodman and Stacy Kim. Adoption Quarterly, Vol. 3(2):5-27. • From the 2000 article,” Outcomes" of adoptions of children from India: A subjective versus normative view of ‘success’”. Adoption Quarterly, Vol. 4(2):3-27.

  28. Survey of 340 families; 21% response rate for families 76 families and 57 adoptees 85% married at adoption & 74% at time of study Most parents were highly educated Most families adopted for altruistic reasons Half had not considered that their child may have health, developmental or behavioral difficulties althougth almost half the children had them Little negativity about adoption outcomes from view of parents the adoptees reported satisfaction with their lives & were optimistic about their futures Adoptions in 1970s & 1980s

  29. Conclusion • Excellent progress is being made with regard to domestic adoption in India. • The BSSK adoption program responds to a need in the community. • Families evaluate the agency practices positively and adoptions are quite positive. • Most of the children are developmentally appropriate and have no health problems, sensory difficulties or behavior problems. • Parents report good parent-child relations and the adoptions are very stable.

  30. Recommendations • Recruiting families is an ongoing process. • Develop a parent advisory board to agencies. • Children, even though they are infants and toddlers, need to have pre-adoptive preparation activities prepared for them by adoption workers. In particular, life books should be continued as standard practice. • More resources for children, such as story books and stories, that have adoption themes as a metaphor need to be developed. • One support that many families commented on was the need for parent seminars and education groups. • Formal services need to be developed to strengthen and support families, particularly as the child gets older and different issues arise. • While the residential facility for care of children waiting adoptive placement is excellent and could serve as a model residence for other countries, the heavy reliance on institutional-based care compared to family-based care is problematic.

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